Ebel science of addiction grand ronde 2016
Transcription
Ebel science of addiction grand ronde 2016
UW MEDICINE │ INJURY CONTROL SCIENCE OF ADDICTION: AN INJURY PREVENTION PERSPECTIVE A FFILIATED TR IB ES OF N OR TH WEST IN D IA N S MID -YEA R C ON VEN TION GR A N D R ON D E, OR Beth Ebel, MD, MSc, MPH Harborview Injury Prevention & Research Center University of Washington/Seattle Children’s Hospital May 25, 2016 ON GETTING HOME SAFELY Happily, as they approach their homes, they will regard you. Happily may their roads home be on the trail of pollen. Happily may they all get back. In beauty I walk. —from The Night Chant, a Navajo returning ceremony 2 CHILD INJURY IN NATIVE COMMUNITIES Injury burden falls heavily on among American Indian/ Alaska Native communities Ø occupant injury Ø pedestrian injury Ø drowning risk Ø poisoning Ø household injury Ø suicide Ø violence High injury rates are responsible for chronic health disparities Injured AI/AN children continue to have disparities between after injury, even after rehabilitation care 3 INJURIES ARE NOT “ACCIDENTS” Most injuries are preventable by what we already know • Seat belt use • Enforcement practices • Impaired driving • Suicide • Gun violence 4 ALCOHOL AND DRUG RELATED DEATHS • More than 1 out of every 10 deaths in Native American communities is linked to alcohol use 5 RISING DRUG USE 2014 6 UNDERSTANDING ADDICTION • Addiction is a maladaptive form of learning • Not easily “unlearned” • Implications: • • Prevention is SO important Treatment is long-term, like diabetes and other chronic illnesses 7 ADDICTION IS CHRONIC DISEASE • Addiction is a chronic disease, like diabetes • Estimated 25 million people in the US are addicted to alcohol or drugs • Treatment is long-term, like diabetes and other chronic illnesses 8 NEED FOR ALCOHOL AND DRUG TREATMENT HIGH IN AI/AN COMMUNITIES 9 HOW DOES ADDICTION WORK? • mechanisms involved in memory and learning are hijacked by drugs of abuse • Mimics natural rewards such as food and sex by triggering neural reward circuits • Alcohol and drugs drive reward circuitry in a way that natural rewards can’t • Circuit run deep in the brain to the nucleus accumbens (pleasure), the prefrontal cortex (decision-making, planning), and deep brain stem areas (“lizard brain”) 10 HOW DOES ADDICTION WORK? • Dopamine is neurotransmitter chemical that triggers the reward pathways • Cocaine, methamphetamines, alcohol, nicotine and opioids increase dopamine levels • Long-lasting changes occur within key regions of the brain 11 ADDICTION AND DOPAMINE • When reward exceeds expectations, dopamine circuitry really lights up. • Conversely, if expectations aren’t met, dopamine activity drops off. • Cocaine, heroin, alcohol and nicotine directly activate the circuit— regardless of how high the expectation was. • Young people are most susceptible 12 WHAT WORKS? • Prevention • Reducing Binge Use • Treatment 13 STARTING YOUNG • Teens are most vulnerable to addiction when our brains are most plastic. • All adult smokers started smoking when they were teenagers. • Public health officials • Big tobacco companies 14 PREVENTION Family measures • Delay high risk drinking • Talk with your kids • Set an example Community measures • Cost of alcohol • Access measures • Health care provider patterns 15 PUBLIC HEALTH FALLACY Separating the why from the how Why: Smoking kills you Sad truth : Telling people that “smoking kills you” doesn’t stop young people from smoking How: Truth anti-smoking campaign 16 TOBACCO AD 17 TRUTH ANTI-SMOKING CAMPAIGN 18 WHAT WORKS? Talk to your children while they are eating; what you say will stay even after you are gone. - Nez Perce tribe 19 REDUCE BINGE DRINKING • Plan ahead • Alternative routes home • Brief alcohol interventions with trauma 20 TREATMENT OPTIONS • Chronic disease model • Harm reduction opportunities 21 WHAT IS NEEDED 1. No complacency 2. Work in partnership with communities Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Planning Data collection Strategies Sustainability Laws & enforcement 3. Measure what matters 4. Build from strengths and tackle problems 22 UW MEDICINE │ INJURY CONTROL QUEST IONS?